A Soul Talks to God
Not only do these poems consistently speak to God in the more general terms of nature, but they also take as subject matter such natural phenomena as Pikes Peak, Paupack's Peak, The Grand Canyon, and the Aurora Borealis. From Pikes Peak, we hear the speaker declaring, Ne'er did I expect to roamThe yogi/poet here captures the experience of traveling up Pikes Peak in an automobile, and the poem continues with this sublime description for two more pages, triumphantly finishing with, "And in joy I cried aloud, 'See Him hide / Beneath the beauty tide!'" Again after much joy from the splendor of the sights beheld on the mountain, the speaker declares that the beauty is God's. Another poem that focuses on the physical, phenomenal world is "Luther Burbank": Beatific Burbank!Luther Burbank was, of course, the successful horticulturist who propagated a number of improved strains of vegetables, including the potato and an edible cactus. In his Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramahansa Yogananda quotes the accomplished scientist: "The secret of improved plant breeding, apart from scientific knowledge, is love. While I was conducting experiments to make 'spineless' cacti, I often talked to the plants to create a vibration of love." Luther Burbank was a scientist who was in touch with the reality of God's presence in all things, including plants, and Yogananda celebrates the scientist's accomplishments, even dedicating his now classic Autobiography of a Yogi to Burbank: "Dedicated to the Memory of LUTHER BURBANK 'An American Saint'." The final poem/song, "When I Take My Vow of Silence," is a meditation devoted to the followers of the renowned Guru: When I take the vow of silence |